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Heathrow unveils its refurbished The Windsor lounge – £3812 for cash, no Priority Pass

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Last week we reviewed aether, the ‘pay to use’ VIP terminal at Manchester Airport. This allows you to avoid the main terminal entirely and be driven to your aircraft for just £110 – or £230 if you want to spend some time in the lounge and enjoy a meal.

Heathrow has its own version of this. Previously known as The Windsor Suite, it has just relaunched as ‘The Windsor by Heathrow’. It costs £3812 for a group of 1-3 people so between 5x and 16x what you would pay at aether.

Let’s look at what you get.

Windsor Suite Heathrow Airport

The refurbishment of The Windsor is the start of a three year process to upgrade the ‘pay as you go’ VIP facilities at the airport.

The Windsor experience is, unlike aether, genuinely ‘door to door’. A chauffeur will collect you from your home (within a 25 mile radius) and drive you to The Windsor, which is inside Terminal 5 with its own dedicated drive-up entrance. Your group will be allocated its own room and you will be driven to your aircraft when it is time to depart.

As with aether, The Windsor has a dedicated Border Force team for inbound passengers. Like aether, it also has a celebrity chef to curate its menus – in this case, Jason Atherton.

Over £3 million has been spent on the refurbishment. To quote:

The spaces are accented with curated British design elements, including Axminster carpets in soft hues. Collaborations with luxury brands like Tom Dixon and Commune add layers of refinement, helping to evoke a ‘home away from home’ ambience, emphasising comfort and special details.

Windsor Suite Heathrow Airport

Guests will be indulged with in-lounge home fragrance products from luxury British brand AUGUST&PIERS, enhancing the guests sensory experience.

The Windsor suite doubles as a private art gallery, showcasing museum-worthy artworks from around the world. Modern British artists such as David Hockney, Tracey Emin and Francis Bacon, as well as American icons like Andy Warhol, feature on the walls. Guests can purchase them at the click of a button, through a QR code hanging next to each artwork.   

It certainly looks smart, as you can see from the photographs here. The airport hired Rankin to take these images which seems like a waste of his talent somehow ….

Jason Atherton has been overseeing the catering at The Windsor since 2016. New options include a signature dish of English butter shortbread with praline cream, Earl Grey tea ice cream, custard sauce and charred mandarin. 

Windsor Suite Heathrow Airport

Use of The Windsor / Windsor Suite has apparently doubled in the last decade. The plan is to double it again in the next three years via additional ‘ambitious transformation plans’, although it is not clear what these are.

The Windsor is, unsurprisingly, dominated by Middle Eastern clientele. The top five destinations served are Doha, Riyadh, Dubai, Los Angeles and New York.

If you think that The Windsor suite is uber-exclusive, think again. Apparently 50,000 passengers per year pass through it, which at £3,812 for a group of 1-3 people makes it a lucrative if niche sideline for the airport. You need to be flying First or business class to book but that is unlikely to be an issue for the clientele.

You can find out more at heathrowvip.com. We will be happy to do a full review if offered!


Getting airport lounge access for free from a credit card

How to get FREE airport lounge access via UK credit cards (April 2025)

Here are the five options to get FREE airport lounge access via a UK credit card.

The Platinum Card from American Express comes with two free Priority Pass cards, one for you and one for a supplementary cardholder. Each card admits two so a family of four gets in free. You get access to all 1,500 lounges in the Priority Pass network – search it here.

You also get access to Eurostar, Lufthansa and Delta Air Lines lounges.  Our American Express Platinum review is here.

You can apply here.

The Platinum Card from American Express

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold is FREE for the first year. It comes with a Priority Pass card loaded with four free visits to any Priority Pass lounge – see the list here.

Additional lounge visits are charged at £24.  You get four more free visits for every year you keep the card.  

There is no annual fee for Amex Gold in Year 1 and you get a 20,000 points sign-up bonus.  Full details are in our American Express Preferred Rewards Gold review here.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 30,000 points, FREE for a year & four airport lounge passes Read our full review

HSBC Premier World Elite Mastercard gets you get a free Priority Pass card, allowing you access to the Priority Pass network.  Guests are charged at £24 although it may be cheaper to pay £60 for a supplementary credit card for your partner.

The card has a fee of £290 and there are strict financial requirements to become a HSBC Premier customer.  Full details are in my HSBC Premier World Elite Mastercard review.

HSBC Premier World Elite Mastercard

A good package, but only available to HSBC Premier clients Read our full review

Got a small business?

If you have a small business, consider American Express Business Platinum which has the same lounge benefits as the personal Platinum card:

American Express Business Platinum

50,000 points when you sign-up and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit Read our full review

You should also consider the Capital on Tap Pro Visa credit card which has a lower fee and, as well as a Priority Pass for airport lounge access, also comes with Radison Rewards VIP hotel status:

Capital on Tap Pro Visa

10,500 points (=10,500 Avios) plus good benefits Read our full review

PS. You can find all of HfP’s UK airport lounge reviews – and we’ve been to most of them – indexed here.

Comments (111)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • JAXBA says:

    But do you earn Heathrow Rewards points??

  • Lumma says:

    Finally, a way to avoid the riff raff in the Concorde room

  • NigelthePensioner says:

    Strange price to set – it used to be £3000……..

    • Thywillbedone says:

      Possibly a round number in a currency that matters to more of the users?

    • Bagoly says:

      The website says £3177+VAT (=3812.40)
      We can forgive Rob leaving off the forty pence.
      Is there some significance to 3177 in Arab culture?
      (if aimed at Chinese would it be 3188?)
      Or are increases capped by a regulator to some measure of inflation?

  • Greg says:

    Not on the Dragon Pass app yet.

  • Pat says:

    Not even a measly £1 from the £3k for a verified climate/carbon offset scheme? But not to worry, paying £3k does exempt you from the drop off charge!

  • zapato1060 says:

    Do they have an On The Beach cornered off section? 😀

  • Rui N. says:

    It’s on Priority Pass from Amex in other countries. Only rip off Britain doesn’t get it.

    • daveinitalia says:

      I believe it’s on the Priority Pass you get with Lloyds but you get turned away at the door because they’re full unless you pay the reservation fee

    • Barrel for Scraping says:

      You can buy entry for this lounge for just £20 in the Club Avolta app. It’s like dining in Pizza Express nobody really pays the full cost, there’s always a discount offer kicking about

  • John says:

    50k pax p.a. seems high. If we divide that by 250 as a crude way to account for passenger numbers being far from uniformly distributed over the year, that would be 200 pax on a somewhat busy, but not peak travel day.

    Assume that the average party is of size 2, that would be 100 parties. Given there are no more than 5 or 6 arrival/departure waves and some waves (e.g., the morning ones) are busier than others, we are talking peaks with like 30 parties at a time. Do they really have that much space?

    • John says:

      Executive traveller writes they only got 8 suites. So 50k pax p.a. I would rule out. They math does not add up.

      • R01 says:

        I thought the same – it sounds far too high. Assuming an average of 2 people to a booking that’s an annual revenue of £114m!

        • Rob says:

          The number is correct.

        • The Original David says:

          Average party size is probably more than 2 – a larger family with a few kids and probably a nanny thrown in would bump up the numbers.

          Also arrivals passengers probably don’t hang around for long, so still count towards the 50k even if they’re in and out in 10 mins just getting their passports checked.

          • Bagoly says:

            And I expect that quite a few of the departing passengers also do not hang around for long – they are paying to avoid the hassle of the main airport, and for the privacy, not for an experience they want prolonged (rather different from most HfP readers!)

      • tontoro says:

        Just doing some quick maths, I think 50k pa is probably the maximum theoretical capacity, so seems unlikely that it’s anywhere close to what they actually get.

        • Rob says:

          Read the press release.

          • The real Swiss Tony says:

            Which is fine – on the assumption the press release is accurate. But marketing comms like this are not subject to the same level of scrutiny that is applied to an RNS-type filing. Seems perfectly rational that people are doing the sums based on the reported 8 suite capacity and concluding something seems amiss. After all, for this product to work, they are going to need a lot of redundancy in the system, too.

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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